your Windows® embedded community

The "brand new" Commodore 64 (above), first introduced in April by trademark licensee Commodore USA LLC, is intended to send buyers of a certain age into nostalgic reveries. "As close to the original in design as humanly possible," it offers styling that faithfully apes the original, the same brown-beige color, and keys with a familiar shape and layout.
Beneath its retro skin, however, the new device contains an x86 PC built around a Mini-ITX CPU board. The April version combined Intel's dual-core Atom D525 processor with an Nvidia Ion 2 GPU (graphics processing unit) and up to 4GB of DDR3 RAM, but the new C64x (Extreme) has gotten quite a kick in the pants.
According to the company, the C64x offers a Core i7-2720QM processor. This 32nm CPU has a 2.2GHz basic clock speed, a 3.3GHz TurboBoost speed, quad cores, a 6MB L3 cache, and a 45-Watt TDP, according to Intel.
The 64x's supporting chipset isn't supplied, but is likely Intel's Q67 Express. Meanwhile, according to Commodore, there's 8GB of preinstalled RAM plus a 2TB hard disk drive, and a slot-loading DVD R/W drive is located on the PC's left side.

Meanwhile, the right side of the 64x (above) includes memory card slots. The coastline of the device's Mini-ITX board is accessible from the rear, and provides two USB 2.0 ports, five USB 2.0 ports, display connections (S/PDIF, HDMI, and DVI), Ethernet, and an eSATA port, according to the company. (The image below is of April's Atom-powered version, so its ports differ.)

Commodore said in April that its new C64 has room for two SATA disk drives internally, plus a Mini PCI Express slot for a wireless LAN adapter (standard on the C64x). Also cited at the time, and presumably again offered here, were headers for an RS232 port, two additional SATA II connectors, and 8-bit GPIO.
The new C64's weight or dimensions still aren't mentioned by Commodore USA. However, the device appears to be much the same size as the original, which reportedly measured approximately 15.9 x 8 x 2.75 inches.

Commodore USA is again touting "Commodore OS Vision," a customized operating system that will allow "playing all 8-bit-era games within seconds," thanks to an emulator (above) that can be selected from the device's boot menu. This emulator will include game ROMs, screenshots, descriptions, and ratings, the company claims.
Development has apparently been more problematical than expected, however, since the company now says "the C64x comes pre-imaged with [Linux] Mint 11 and will dual-boot with the retro-inspired Commodore OS Vision when [it is] released." Of course, users may install any x86 version of Windows if they prefer.
Availability
According to Commodore USA, the C64x is available now for $1,499. More information may be found on the C64 product page and the Commodore USA online store.
Jonathan Angel can be followed at www.twitter.com/gadgetsense.